Start an Adaptive Clothing Ministry to Help Wounded Veterans

When former Navy nurse Pat White read in a magazine that the organization Sew Much Comfort needed volunteers to make adaptive garments for soldiers with burns and other injuries, she urged the members in her sewing class First United Methodist Church in Oviedo, Fla., to help.

Within four years, the class had sewn 1,500 garments featuring Velcro closures, uneven-sized legs to accommodate casts, and more, according to sewing teacher Anne Dunson.

“Several of us have family in the military,” volunteer Carol Madsen says. “We’ve stretched our abilities learning how to do these garments. We know we’re helping.”

This article originally appeared in the May/June 2010 issue of Outreach magazine.

Evangel Church: Never Stop Serving

Last year, Evangel started a church two hours away inside the largest women’s prison in New York. A pastor and a team go every Thursday to share a message, preach and lead worship for the prisoners.

Angulus Wilson: Evangelism Is the Heart of God

When the church taps into the mission and the heart of God, she gets mobilized, she can get revived. We can see growth and new initiative.

David Kinnaman: Start the Conversation

Church leaders must recognize that what feels hidden is actually hurting people, and that discipleship includes helping people break free from destructive patterns.